You know about that one, much-hemmed-and-hawed-over, GDPR-ish, national, US privacy law? The one we don’t have? The lack of which means the country’s data privacy landscape is made up of a crazy quilt of state laws? Not happening. Not this year. Learn how this impacts your privacy in a great NakedSecurity article: . In spite of the US Federal Trade Commission (FTC) marching down to Capitol Hill to beat the drum for a unified federal privacy law (and more regulatory powers to enforce it), and in spite of both the House and Senate holding hearings on privacy legislation, transparency about how data is collected and shared, and the stiffening of penalties for data-handling violations, the US is not likely to see an online privacy bill come before Congress this year. That’s according toReuters’anonymous sources, who say that lawmakers haven’t managed to agree on issues such as whether the bill would preempt state rules. And when we’re talking about state rules, we’re talking about the elephant in the room: California’s Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA), which goes into effect on 1 January 2020. The link for this article located at NakedSecurity is no longer available. . In spite of the FTC's initiatives, the chances of a federal privacy statute being enacted this year remain slim, resulting in state regulations continuing to apply.. Federal Law, Privacy Issues, Data Protection, State Regulations. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
As of May 2019, over 20 US states have introduced bills seeking to regulate data privacy, data security, or some combination of the two. While many of these bills agree in spirit (i.e. privacy good, data collection and usage bad), the various bills are decidedly more divergent as to how to accomplish these objectives. . With the states locked in an arms race to one-up each other on being the most privacy protective, the end result over the next four to five years could be a patchwork of state regulations resulting in not only a compliance nightmare for companies, but also a wildly uneven distribution of privacy rights for consumers. The link for this article located at The Next Web is no longer available. . With jurisdictions fiercely vying to surpass one another in data security regulations, the ensuing environment may evolve into a disordered one.. Data Protection Standards, Privacy Compliance, State Data Laws. . Brittany Day
Companies struggling to keep up with a patchwork of state laws related to data privacy and information security have three more to contend with, as new security-breach notification laws went into effect in Illinois, Louisiana and New Jersey on Jan. 1. Like existing statutes in more than 20 other states, the new laws prescribe various actions that companies are required to take in the event of a security breach involving the compromise of personal data about their customers. . For instance, New Jersey’s Identity Theft Prevention Act requires businesses to destroy all unneeded customer data and to notify consumers when sensitive data about them has been accessed by an unauthorized person. The law also limits the use of Social Security numbers on all items that are sent via postal mail. The link for this article located at ComputerWorld is no longer available. . For instance, New Jersey’s Identity Theft Prevention Act requires businesses to destroy all unneed. companies, struggling, patchwork, state, related, privacy, informati. . Benjamin D. Thomas
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